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United Arab Emirates · Arabian Gulf

Dubai.
The city that refused to be ordinary.

Built from desert sand in half a century. The tallest building on earth. Gold sold by the gram in a souk older than the towers around it. A desert that turns ochre and rose at sunset. And food from every country on earth within a taxi ride.

3.6M
Population
AED
Currency
9.0/10
Safety
GMT+4
Timezone
DXB / DWC
Airports
Overview

A city built on ambition, oil money, and the absolute refusal to accept limits.

In 1970, Dubai was a small trading port of perhaps 60,000 people. Today it is a global city of 3.6 million with the world's tallest building, one of the busiest airports on earth, and an economy that has largely weaned itself off oil dependency through tourism, finance, and trade. The transformation is genuinely without parallel in modern urban history, and the physical evidence of it is everywhere: glass towers emerging from the desert, an indoor ski slope in a shopping mall, a palm-shaped island built from sand dredged from the seabed.

Two Dubais coexist. The new Dubai — Downtown, the Marina, the Palm — is the city of record-breaking towers, rooftop infinity pools, and brunch menus that cost more than a flight here. The old Dubai — Deira, Bur Dubai, the Creek — is the trading city it has always been: gold souk, spice souk, abra (wooden boat) crossings, and the chaotic, fragrant, deeply human atmosphere of a Gulf market town that predates the towers by centuries.

The practical note: Dubai has specific laws and cultural norms that visitors need to understand before arriving. Alcohol is legal in licensed venues but illegal in public. Public displays of affection can result in arrest. Certain medications are controlled. Dressing modestly in non-resort areas is expected. None of these rules are unreasonable once understood — Dubai is extremely safe and welcoming to tourists who approach it with cultural awareness.

Areas

Downtown for the towers. Deira and Bur Dubai for the soul.

Dubai is a long, narrow city stretching along the Arabian Gulf coast, with the Creek dividing the historic trading areas from each other. The main visitor areas are well spread out — the Metro connects them, but distances are real.

Deira & the Creek
Historic · Gold Souk · Spice Souk · Authentic

The old trading heart of Dubai on the north side of the Creek. The Gold Souk (over 300 shops), Spice Souk, and Perfume Souk are here — sensory, bustling, and completely different from the tower city to the south. Cross the Creek on a wooden abra for 1 AED. The Al Fahidi Historic District (Bastakiya) is a beautifully preserved neighbourhood of wind-tower architecture and small museums.

Gold Souk Spice Souk Abra crossing
Dubai Marina
Waterfront · Nightlife · Walk · Modern

An artificial marina lined with residential towers, restaurants, and the JBR (Jumeirah Beach Residence) beach walk. The most lively outdoor evening area in Dubai — the 7km Marina Walk has the best concentration of mid-range restaurants. Less spectacularly architectural than Downtown but more human in scale and better for an evening out.

Marina Walk JBR Beach Restaurants & nightlife
Jumeirah & Al Fahidi
Beaches · Heritage · Mosques

Jumeirah is the upmarket residential beach suburb with the Burj Al Arab on its coast. Al Fahidi (old Bur Dubai) has the Historic District with wind-tower courtyard buildings housing the Dubai Museum and small galleries. The Jumeirah Mosque — one of the most beautiful in the UAE — offers guided tours for non-Muslims on mornings throughout the week.

Burj Al Arab Dubai Museum Jumeirah Mosque
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First time in Dubai?
Stay in Downtown for Burj Khalifa access or in the Marina for a better evening atmosphere and beach access. Dedicate at least a half-day to Deira and the Creek regardless of where you stay — it is the most irreplaceable part of Dubai and the most overlooked by tower-focused visitors.
Where to Stay

The most spectacular hotels in the world. At the most spectacular prices.

Dubai has some of the most extravagant hotel experiences on earth — the Burj Al Arab, Atlantis, the Armani Hotel inside the Burj Khalifa. It also has solid mid-range business hotels and a growing budget hotel scene in Deira and Bur Dubai. The city runs heavily on business travel, so weekday rates at business hotels can be significantly higher than weekends.

Burj Al Arab Jumeirah
Ultra Luxury
Jumeirah·from AED 5,000/night

The world's most famous hotel and the symbol of Dubai's ambition — a sail-shaped tower on its own artificial island. All-suite, with a butler for every room, a helipad that has hosted Roger Federer and Tiger Woods, and the kind of opulence that requires no further adjectives. A once-in-a-lifetime stay. The afternoon tea (AED 600+) is the most affordable way to experience the interior.

Check availability →
Armani Hotel Dubai
Luxury
Downtown (Burj Khalifa)·from AED 1,800/night

Giorgio Armani's hotel occupying floors 1–8 of the Burj Khalifa itself. The most extraordinary address in the world — you are sleeping inside the tallest building on earth. Minimalist Armani design, extraordinary service, and direct access to At.mosphere restaurant on the 122nd floor.

Check availability →
Address Downtown Dubai
Luxury
Downtown·from AED 900/night

The best view of the Dubai Fountain and Burj Khalifa from a hotel that is itself extraordinary — infinity pool facing the fountain, excellent restaurants, and the most photogenic breakfast in Dubai. The standard luxury choice for Downtown at a fraction of the Burj Al Arab price.

Check availability →
Rove Downtown
Mid-range
Downtown·from AED 350/night

Dubai's best mid-range hotel brand — clean, well-designed, with rooftop pools and genuinely good service at prices far below the surrounding luxury hotels. Multiple locations across the city. The Downtown property is walking distance from the Burj Khalifa and Dubai Mall. The best value option in the tourist centre.

Check availability →
Arabian Courtyard Hotel
Heritage
Al Fahidi / Bur Dubai·from AED 250/night

A traditionally styled hotel in the Al Fahidi historic district, directly opposite the Dubai Museum. The most atmospheric mid-range option in Dubai — Arabic decor, good restaurant, and the best location for exploring old Bur Dubai, the Creek, and the souks without taking a taxi from a tower hotel.

Check availability →
Dubai Youth Hostel
Hostel
Al Qusais·from AED 80/night

The HI-affiliated youth hostel in Al Qusais — the most affordable accommodation in Dubai. Clean, functional, and well-connected to the Metro. Not central but manageable. Private rooms available. The only real budget option in a city built for spenders.

Check availability →
Interactive Hotel Map

Find and compare hotels across Dubai's districts.

Food

Every cuisine on earth within a taxi ride. But the Emirati and Levantine food deserves specific attention.

Dubai's food scene reflects its population — 90% expat, from India, Pakistan, Lebanon, the Philippines, Europe, and everywhere else. Authentic Indian, Pakistani, Lebanese, Iranian, Filipino, and Sri Lankan restaurants exist at every price point. The Emirati cuisine — the food of the UAE's indigenous culture — is less visible but extraordinary when found. The shawarma from a good street-level Lebanese joint is one of the great cheap eats in the world.

01
Shawarma
5–15 AEDLebanese and Arab restaurants everywhere

Slow-roasted marinated chicken or lamb shaved from a vertical spit, wrapped in flatbread with garlic sauce (toum), pickles, tomato, and parsley. Dubai's unofficial street food and the best cheap meal in the city. Al Mallah in Satwa (open since 1979) is the most cited institution. Shawarma from the Lebanese takeaways on Al Diyafah Street in Satwa is as good as anywhere in the Middle East.

02
Emirati Breakfast
40–80 AEDEmirati restaurants and cafes

Balaleet (sweet vermicelli noodles with saffron-spiced eggs), chami (flatbread with date syrup and cream cheese), luqaimat (small deep-fried dough balls with date honey), and karak chai (strong spiced tea with evaporated milk). The most distinctly local food experience in Dubai. Arabian Tea House in Al Fahidi serves an excellent traditional Emirati breakfast in a beautifully restored courtyard.

03
Biryani (Indian & Pakistani)
15–35 AEDDeira and Bur Dubai restaurants

Dubai has the finest Indian and Pakistani restaurants outside the subcontinent — decades of South Asian expat communities have built an extraordinary restaurant scene in Deira, Bur Dubai, and Karama. Dum-cooked biryani, karahi chicken, nihari, and haleem at prices that make the tourist restaurants look absurd by comparison. The streets around Meena Bazaar in Bur Dubai have some of the best.

04
Mezze
15–30 AED per dishLebanese restaurants

The full Lebanese mezze spread: hummus, baba ghanoush, fattoush, tabbouleh, kibbeh, fatayer, and a dozen other small dishes eaten with fresh flatbread. Dubai's Lebanese restaurant scene is exceptional — the Lebanese community here has been building it for fifty years. Automatic restaurant in Jumeirah and Zaatar W Zeit for affordable versions, Em Sherif for an upmarket experience.

05
Dubai Friday Brunch
250–600 AED per personHotel restaurants, Friday only

The defining Dubai social institution. Every Friday, hotel restaurants offer unlimited food and (usually) unlimited soft drinks or alcohol from around 12pm to 4pm for a fixed price. The food quality ranges from extraordinary to mediocre; the experience is always theatrical. Sass Café in DIFC, Fi'lia, and Zuma are among the most cited. Not cheap but very Dubai — book a week ahead for popular venues.

Activities

Burj Khalifa at sunset. Desert safari at dusk. Gold Souk in between.

Dubai's activities sit on a spectrum from world-record spectacle (the Burj Khalifa, the largest fountain, the biggest mall) to genuinely ancient (the Gold Souk, the Creek abra crossing, the desert). The combination is what makes Dubai unlike any other city — nowhere else can you stand on the 124th floor of the world's tallest tower and be 45 minutes from a desert that has looked unchanged for ten thousand years.

Burj Khalifa At The Top
Landmark
Downtown·from AED 149 (Level 124)

The 828-metre Burj Khalifa is the world's tallest structure and the observation deck at Level 124 gives views across Dubai to the Arabian Gulf, the desert, and — on a clear day — Abu Dhabi 140km away. Level 148 (AED 369+) is even higher but the Level 124 view is extraordinary. Book online well in advance — peak sunset slots sell out days ahead. The sunrise slot (AED 149) is the best value and least crowded.

Book Burj Khalifa →
Desert Safari
Desert
45 min from city·from AED 200

Dune bashing in 4WDs across the red sand dunes of the Dubai Desert Conservation Reserve, followed by a Bedouin camp at sunset with camel riding, sand-boarding, henna, and a dinner of grilled meats under the stars. The standard evening desert safari is one of the most popular activities in Dubai and genuinely good — the desert is beautiful and the camp experience, while somewhat theatrical, is entertaining. Book through your hotel or a reputable operator.

Book desert safari →
Gold Souk & Spice Souk
Market
Deira·Free to browse

The Gold Souk in Deira has over 300 shops displaying more gold jewellery than anywhere else on earth — the price is set by the day's gold rate plus a small making charge, and bargaining on the making charge is expected. The adjacent Spice Souk is one of the most atmospheric markets in the Middle East — sacks of saffron, cardamom, frankincense, and dried roses. Cross the Creek by abra (1 AED) from Bur Dubai to reach them.

Souk walking tours →
Dubai Frame
Landmark
Zabeel Park·AED 50

A 150-metre picture frame with old Dubai (Deira, the Creek) visible through one side and new Dubai (Downtown, the Marina) visible through the other. The glass-floored sky bridge at the top creates a vertiginous link between the two cities. Genuinely clever conceptually and one of Dubai's most photographed recent additions. Better value than the Burj Khalifa for the price.

Book tickets →
Dubai Fountain Show
Spectacle
Downtown (Burj Khalifa Lake)·Free

The world's largest choreographed fountain system — 275 metres of jets synchronized to music, with the Burj Khalifa as backdrop. Shows run every 30 minutes from 6pm to 11pm. Completely free from the surrounding boardwalk. Best viewed from the Dubai Mall lakeside terrace or from a dinner table with a lake view (book the restaurant view tables in advance). One of the great free spectacles in any city.

Evening tours →
Al Fahidi Historic District
Heritage
Bur Dubai·Free

The most intact neighbourhood of pre-oil Dubai — a labyrinth of courtyard houses with wind towers (traditional air conditioning), small galleries, the Dubai Museum in a restored fort, and the XVA Gallery and boutique hotel. Walking through the narrow lanes here is the only experience in Dubai that gives you a sense of what the city was before the towers arrived.

Heritage tours →
Getting Around

The Metro is excellent. But Dubai is built for cars and the distances are real.

Dubai has a modern, clean, and air-conditioned Metro with two lines that cover the main tourist corridors. It does not reach everywhere — the Creek and Deira souks require a taxi or abra. Uber and Careem are the standard app-based options. Taxis are metered and reliable, unlike many cities in the region.

🚊
Dubai Metro

Two lines (Red and Green). The Red Line covers the main tourist corridor: Dubai Airport to Deira to BurJuman to Union Square to Dubai Mall/Burj Khalifa to the Marina. Air-conditioned, punctual, and affordable. Buy a Nol card at any station. Women-and-children-only carriages at the front.

AED 3–8.50 per journey
🚍
Uber / Careem

Both work well in Dubai. Careem is the local version (owned by Uber). Metered taxis are also available on the street and reliable — the RTA taxi network is regulated and transparent. Never bargain with taxis in Dubai — they are metered and the meters are accurate.

AED 20–80 most journeys
🚴
Abra (Creek Crossing)

Wooden motorboats that cross Dubai Creek between Deira and Bur Dubai — one of the great cheap experiences in the city. The traditional crossing costs 1 AED per person. The modern air-conditioned water taxis cost more but run to additional stops along the Creek. Essential for reaching the souks from Bur Dubai side.

AED 1 (traditional) / AED 25+ (water taxi)
✈️
Airport Transfer

Dubai International (DXB) is on the Metro Red Line — Terminals 1 and 3 are Metro-connected (Terminal 2 requires a bus). Metro to Downtown takes 20–25 minutes and costs AED 8.50. A taxi or Uber to Downtown costs AED 60–80. The Metro is by far the better option unless you have significant luggage.

AED 8.50 (Metro) / AED 70 (taxi)
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Bus

An extensive bus network covers areas the Metro misses. Uses the same Nol card. Less intuitive than the Metro for visitors but useful for reaching Jumeirah beach areas and some souks. The RTA app has real-time schedules and route planning.

AED 3–5 per journey
📶
eSIM / Data

Note: VoIP calls (WhatsApp, FaceTime voice/video) are restricted in the UAE and may not work. Use an Airalo eSIM for UAE data. Local SIMs from du or Etisalat are available at the airport. Both networks have excellent 4G/5G coverage across the city.

SIM from AED 50 / eSIM from $8
Budget

Expensive at the top. Surprisingly affordable if you eat like a resident.

Dubai has extreme price variance. The luxury hotels, rooftop bars, and brunch venues charge world-city prices. But the shawarma shops, Indian restaurants, and local cafes in Deira and Bur Dubai serve excellent food for 10–40 AED. The Metro is cheap. Most parks and public spaces are free. The main budget danger is falling into the mall restaurant and tourist venue trap where everything costs three times more.

Category Budget (AED 250–400/day) Mid-range (AED 700–1,200/day) Comfortable (AED 2,000+/day)
Accommodation AED 80–180
Youth hostel or Deira budget hotel
AED 350–700
Rove Hotels or mid-range business hotel
AED 900+
Address Downtown, Armani Hotel tier
Food AED 40–80
Shawarma, Indian restaurants, local cafes
AED 150–300
Lebanese restaurant dinner + drinks
AED 500+
Zuma, Friday brunch, rooftop dining
Transport AED 20–40
Metro + abra
AED 60–120
Metro + Uber/taxi
AED 200+
Private car, taxis throughout
Activities AED 50–100
Dubai Frame, souks, fountain (free)
AED 200–400
Burj Khalifa + desert safari
AED 600+
Private desert camp, Burj Al Arab tea
Best Time to Visit

November to March is perfect. May to September is a different city entirely.

Dubai has two distinct seasons. The winter (November–March) is warm, dry, and ideal — outdoor dining, beach days, desert safaris, and the full range of activities. The summer (May–September) is brutally hot at 40–48°C with very high humidity — outdoor activities are limited to before 9am and after 8pm. Dubai is largely experienced from one air-conditioned space to another in summer. Hotels are significantly cheaper in summer.

Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Best (cool & dry)
Good (shoulder)
Hot but manageable
Extreme heat & humidity
🏅
Dubai Shopping Festival — January to February
The annual Dubai Shopping Festival (usually January–February) brings massive retail discounts, entertainment events, fireworks, and an energy that defines the peak season. Hotel prices are highest during this period but the city is at its most vibrant. Book accommodation months ahead for DSF dates.
Safety & Laws

One of the safest cities in the world. With specific laws that every visitor must know.

9.0

Overall safety score — Very Low Risk

Dubai is one of the safest cities in the world for tourists. Crime rates are extremely low. The risks to visitors come primarily from unfamiliarity with local laws rather than from criminal activity.

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Alcohol Laws

Alcohol is legal for non-Muslims in licensed venues only — hotels, certain restaurants, and licensed bars. Drinking in public (streets, beaches, parks) is illegal. Arriving at any location visibly drunk can result in arrest. The legal drinking age is 21. During Ramadan, stricter rules apply even in licensed venues during daylight hours.

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Public Behaviour

Public displays of affection — kissing, prolonged embracing — between unmarried couples can result in arrest and deportation. This applies to heterosexual couples as well as same-sex couples. Same-sex relationships are illegal in the UAE. Swearing and rude gestures in public, including in cars, can result in fines or arrest.

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Dress Code

Modest dress (shoulders and knees covered) is expected in malls, souks, and public areas. Swimwear is fine on designated beaches and at hotel pools. Revealing clothing in non-beach public areas is technically illegal and can attract attention. During Ramadan, particularly conservative dress is expected in public.

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Medications & Substances

Some medications legal in other countries are controlled in the UAE — certain painkillers, anxiety medications, and antidepressants require a prior licence. Check the UAE Ministry of Health list before travelling with any prescription medication. Drug offences carry severe mandatory penalties including long prison sentences for very small amounts.

👩
Solo Female Travel

Dubai is very safe for solo female travellers in terms of violent crime. The large international population and the tourist infrastructure make it one of the more comfortable Gulf cities to travel in as a woman. Dress modestly in souks and older neighbourhoods, use licensed taxis or Uber rather than accepting rides from strangers, and be aware that late-night bar areas can involve unwanted attention. The Marina, Downtown, and the major hotels are all comfortable at all hours.

Locals Know

What Dubai residents never think to tell tourists.

01
The abra across the Creek costs 1 AED and is the best value experience in the cityThe wooden motorboats (abras) that cross Dubai Creek between Deira and Bur Dubai cost exactly 1 AED per person and run continuously throughout the day. The 5-minute crossing gives you the best view of the historic Creek — wooden dhows, the old warehouses, the wind towers of Al Fahidi on one side and the minaret of the Grand Mosque on the other. Nothing else in Dubai at any price delivers this density of historical texture.
02
Book the Burj Khalifa sunrise slot, not the sunset slotThe sunset slots (6–8pm) are the most popular and sell out earliest. The sunrise slot (around 7–8am) costs less (AED 149 vs AED 300+ for premium sunset), has dramatically fewer people, and gives a completely different view — the city still quiet, the light golden across the desert, the Palm Jumeirah clear against the Gulf. If you are going once, go at sunrise.
03
Al Diyafah Street in Satwa has the best cheap food in DubaiThe stretch of Al Diyafah Road in the Satwa neighbourhood is Dubai's best street for affordable, genuine food — Lebanese shawarma shops, Iranian cafes, South Asian biryani joints, and the famous Al Mallah restaurant. Prices are a fraction of Downtown. The neighbourhood itself has none of the tower city glamour but is one of the most genuinely human parts of Dubai, where the actual expat working population lives and eats.
04
The Dubai Fountain is free and shows run every 30 minutesOne of the most spectacular things in Dubai costs nothing. The fountain shows on Burj Khalifa Lake run every 30 minutes from 6pm to 11pm, with a 1pm and 1:30pm show on Fridays. Watch from the free boardwalk around the lake. The paid boat rides through the fountain (AED 75) give a closer perspective but the free boardwalk view is excellent. The 6pm show — the first one, before the crowds peak — is often the best.
05
VoIP calls do not work in the UAEWhatsApp calls, FaceTime, and most VoIP services are blocked by the UAE telecoms regulator. Text messaging and WhatsApp chat work fine. If you need to make calls, use a local SIM with call minutes, the standard telephone, or a VPN (which exists in a legal grey area — use a reputable, established one and do not discuss it). This surprises visitors who are used to WhatsApp calls working everywhere.
06
The Arabian Tea House in Al Fahidi is the most beautiful breakfast in DubaiA restored courtyard house in the Al Fahidi Historic District serves traditional Emirati breakfast (balaleet, chami, luqaimat, karak chai) in the most beautiful setting in the city — a shaded courtyard of bougainvillea and carved wooden screens, surrounded by the wind towers of old Dubai. No skyscrapers visible. Go at 8am before tour groups arrive. This is what Dubai looked like before the oil.
Day Trips

Abu Dhabi is 90 minutes. The Hatta Mountains are 90 minutes the other way.

Abu Dhabi
90 min by car or bus·from AED 25 bus

The UAE capital has the Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque (one of the most beautiful buildings in the world, free entry), the Louvre Abu Dhabi on Saadiyat Island, the Formula 1 circuit on Yas Island, and Ferrari World. A full day trip combining the mosque and the Louvre is the most rewarding cultural day trip from Dubai.

Hatta (Hajar Mountains)
90 min by car·from AED 200 tour

The dramatic rocky Hajar Mountains in the Dubai exclave of Hatta — a heritage village, a turquoise mountain reservoir for kayaking and paddleboarding, mountain biking trails, and the complete absence of the Gulf coast heat. The most dramatic landscape accessible from Dubai. Better by car than organised tour for flexibility.

Sharjah
30 min by taxi·AED 60–80 taxi

Dubai's neighbouring emirate and the UAE's cultural capital — excellent museums (Museum of Islamic Civilization, Sharjah Art Museum), a beautifully restored historic area around the old souks, and a completely different atmosphere from Dubai's commercial energy. Sharjah is alcohol-free and more conservative in dress expectations.

Oman Border (Khor Fakkan)
2h by car·from AED 300 tour

The east coast of the UAE on the Gulf of Oman has some of the best snorkelling and diving in the region at Snoopy Island (Khor Fakkan) and Dibba. Clear, calm water, excellent coral, and crowds a fraction of what you find in Dubai. A car is needed — or book a day tour. Bring your passport for the Fujairah checkpoint.

FAQ

Questions we hear every time.

How many days do I need in Dubai?
Four days covers the Burj Khalifa, the Desert Safari, the Gold Souk and Creek, Al Fahidi Historic District, the Dubai Fountain, and the Dubai Frame. A fifth day allows an Abu Dhabi day trip for the Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque and Louvre. A week is comfortable without rushing. Dubai does not reward extended stays as much as some cities — the main experiences are concentrated.
Is Dubai safe for LGBTQ+ travellers?
Same-sex relationships are illegal in the UAE and can result in imprisonment and deportation. Many LGBTQ+ travellers visit Dubai without incident by exercising significant discretion — no public displays of affection, no visible signals of sexual orientation. The risk of targeted enforcement against discreet tourists is low in practice, but the legal situation is real and the risk cannot be dismissed. Every traveller should make an informed personal assessment before visiting.
What happens during Ramadan in Dubai?
Ramadan (dates vary by lunar calendar) is a significant but manageable time to visit Dubai. Eating, drinking, and smoking in public during daylight hours is prohibited and can result in fines. Restaurants are closed or screened during the day but open after sunset for Iftar. Music is toned down. Hotels serve food and non-alcoholic drinks to guests in private areas. After sunset, the city comes alive with Iftar gatherings and Ramadan tents. It is a genuinely interesting cultural experience if approached with respect.
Can I photograph anything in Dubai?
Photography of the skyline, the souks, and tourist sites is generally fine. Do not photograph government buildings, military installations, or airports. Never photograph local people (especially women) without permission. Posting photographs to social media that could be deemed offensive to the UAE, its rulers, or Islam is a criminal offence. Standard travel photography is unproblematic; political or satirical photography is not.
Is there anything to do in Dubai beyond shopping and towers?
Much more than its reputation suggests. The Dubai Creek and the historic neighbourhoods of Deira and Al Fahidi offer genuine historical depth. The desert is extraordinary and immediately accessible. The food culture — particularly the South Asian and Levantine scenes in Bur Dubai and Satwa — is among the most interesting in the Middle East. The Sheikh Mohammed Centre for Cultural Understanding offers excellent guided mosque visits and cultural breakfasts. Dubai rewards visitors who look beyond the malls.

Exploring beyond Dubai?

The full UAE guide covers Abu Dhabi, the Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque, Ras Al Khaimah, visa rules, and everything else you need for the Emirates.

Read the UAE guide →