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HomeTopicsFirst 7 Days Checklist

Dubai

First 7 Days Checklist

The minimum setup tasks newcomers should complete in week one.

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AI summary · assistance only

You'll find that navigating Dubai can be overwhelming, especially in the first week. Most newcomers make the mistake of committing to an apartment before seeing it, so consider staying at a monthly Airbnb studio (AED 150-250/night) initially. Watch out for the surprise that Friday is a weekend day, not Sunday, and plan your government services and bank visits accordingly. To get started, prioritize getting a local SIM card at the airport (du or Etisalat, AED 55 for a tourist SIM) to stay connected. Your next step today can be to shortlist SIM plans and research affordable accommodation options, such as Deira or Karama, to make the most of your first week in Dubai.

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Ranked by contributor trust level and quality score.

Medical test for residency visa — what happens

Trust L1Updated Mar 15, 2026

Dubai · Experience date Jan 31, 2026

All residency visa applicants must pass a medical test: blood test (HIV, Hepatitis B) and chest X-ray. Done at government health centers (Al Twar, Rashidiya, etc.) or private centers approved by MOHRE. Cost: AED 320 at government centers. Takes 1-2 hours. Results in 3-5 days. If result is 'unfit': visa is rejected and you must leave UAE. This is standard, not negotiable. Your employer's PRO usually arranges this.

Contributor: David Okonkwo

WhatsApp group — join your area/building group immediately

Trust L1Updated Nov 19, 2025

Dubai · Experience date Apr 2, 2026

Every residential building and neighborhood in Dubai has a WhatsApp group. Ask your building guard, security desk, or neighbors how to join. These groups share: maintenance updates, lost and found, delivery issues, local tips, second-hand items, meetups. Essential information source that no website or app replicates. Also look for: Dubai Expats Facebook groups, r/dubai subreddit, and city-specific Telegram groups for your nationality.

Contributor: Ivan Petrov

Getting a driving license converted — do it in month 1

Trust L1Updated Nov 15, 2025

Dubai · Experience date Jan 30, 2026

If your country is on the UAE license exemption list (UK, US, Canada, EU, Australia + many others): convert your license at Dubai Traffic Police without taking a driving test. Required: original license, Emirates ID, passport, one photo, eye test (done there, AED 40). Fee: AED 110. Takes 30-45 minutes. Do this early — UAE license needed for car rental, car purchase, and many expats find having a car essential after 3-6 months.

Contributor: Tom Fletcher

Latest from the community

Alcohol in Dubai — complete guide for newcomers

Apr 28, 2026

Dubai · Experience date Jan 28, 2026

As of January 2023, UAE removed the requirement for a personal alcohol license. You can now buy alcohol: from licensed liquor stores (MMI, African & Eastern) with UAE residency visa or passport, in licensed hotels and restaurants. Cannot buy from supermarkets (except some Waitrose locations in licensed buildings). Drinking in public: illegal. Drinking at home, hotel room, or licensed venue: fully legal. Ramadan: no alcohol sales in most venues during daylight hours.

Contributor: Maria Santos

Weekend is Friday-Saturday, not Saturday-Sunday

Apr 22, 2026

Dubai · Experience date Feb 10, 2026

Dubai's weekend is Friday and Saturday. Sunday is a workday. Most government services and banks are closed Friday (some open Saturday morning). Restaurants and malls are open 7 days. If you're used to Sunday rest, adjust your mental calendar. Ramadan timing: businesses shift hours significantly — government offices work 9am-2pm, restaurants open after sunset only. Ramadan dates shift ~11 days earlier each year.

Contributor: Emma Larsson

Week 1 onboarding checklist starter

Apr 9, 2026

Dubai Marina · Experience date Apr 9, 2026

Get a transport card on day one, shortlist SIM plans before airport purchase, and keep all rental payment receipts.

Contributor: Demo Contributor

Finding your nearest clinic and hospital

Apr 2, 2026

Dubai · Experience date Mar 18, 2026

Register with a local clinic in your first week — before you're sick. Check DHA app or healthhub.ae for approved clinics by area. With good insurance: nearly everything covered. Without insurance or for minor issues: Aster Clinic is cheapest private option (AED 100-150 consultation). Government hospitals (Rashid Hospital, Dubai Hospital): cheapest but long waits. For emergencies: Mediclinic or American Hospital have 24-hour emergency rooms and good English-speaking staff.

Contributor: Raj Patel

Weekend farmers' markets — find your community

Mar 11, 2026

Dubai · Experience date Dec 27, 2025

Dubai has weekend farmers markets Oct-April: Ripe Market at Al Serkal Avenue and Dubai Police Academy Park (Friday/Saturday), Farmers Market on the Terrace at Dubai Festival City (Friday). These aren't just shopping — they're community hubs where expats meet. Good for: fresh produce, meeting people from your industry, discovering small local businesses. Also: Time Out Market Dubai has 17 local restaurants under one roof, great for first weekends exploring food.

Contributor: Lucas Mendes

Day 1 priority: get a local SIM card before anything else

Mar 9, 2026

Dubai · Experience date Feb 17, 2026

Your first hour in Dubai: buy a local SIM at the airport (du or Etisalat, AED 55 for tourist SIM). Without a UAE phone number, you can't: book appointments, receive OTP codes, use most apps, or register for any government service. Don't wait to 'figure out which plan is best' — just get the tourist SIM immediately and switch to a better plan in week 2 when you know your area and needs.

Contributor: James Wilson

Learn basic Arabic phrases — goes a long way

Mar 8, 2026

Dubai · Experience date Apr 14, 2026

Most service workers in Dubai speak English. But knowing basic Arabic: Shukran (thank you), Marhaba (hello), Min fadlak (please), La shukran (no thank you) — earns you immediate warmth and respect. Arabic is the official language but Dubai is so multinational that English is genuinely sufficient for daily life. Indian expats: Hindi is widely spoken and understood in many service contexts. Taxi drivers often speak English, Hindi, or Urdu but not always.

Contributor: Raj Patel
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