The Truth About UAE Scams
Common Tricks
- "Meter is broken": Driver claims meter doesn't work, then overcharges. Never accept — exit and find another taxi.
- Long route: Taking scenic route to bump fare. Use Google Maps to track if suspicious.
- Airport unlicensed drivers: Men approach offering "taxi" — often 3-5x normal price. Only use official taxi queue.
- No change: "Sorry, no change for your 100 AED." Carry small bills or use card payment.
How to Protect Yourself
- Use Uber or Careem — price shown upfront, no meter games
- Official RTA taxis have cream color with colored roof
- Always insist meter is started at trip beginning
- From airport: use only official queue, ignore anyone who approaches you
- Taxi fare from DXB Airport to Downtown: ~50-70 AED (know this before you land)
Gold Souk Reality
The Gold Souk is legitimate and regulated. All gold is real and hallmarked. The "scam" is paying tourist prices instead of negotiated prices.
What to Watch For
- Not negotiating: First price is never the real price. Negotiate 20-30% off.
- Not checking daily rate: Look up gold price before you go. Shops can't charge more than market rate + making charge.
- Street vendors near souk: Fake gold, fake watches. If it's outside established shops, it's not real.
- High-pressure sales: Good shops don't need to pressure. Walk away from anyone aggressive.
Smart Shopping Tips
- Check the daily gold rate online first
- Ask for weight in grams + making charge — this is how real price is calculated
- Get a receipt with weight, purity (karat), and price
- Buy from shops inside the souk, not outside on streets
- Compare 3-4 shops before deciding
Designer Goods
- Street vendors selling "Rolex" for 100 AED = fake
- Dubai malls sell genuine items only
- Karama Market is known for counterfeit goods (buyer beware)
The Problem
Desert safaris are hugely popular, but quality varies wildly. Ultra-cheap deals often mean old vehicles, rushed experiences, hidden charges, and minimal safety standards.
Red Flags
- Too cheap: Quality safaris cost 150-300 AED. If someone offers 50-80 AED, corners are being cut.
- Street sellers: Random people handing out flyers — usually unlicensed operators
- Hotel "travel desk": Often commission-based, prices inflated 50-100%
- Hidden fees: "BBQ dinner extra" / "Photos cost more" / "Better car is upgrade"
- Old vehicles: Safety concern — newer vehicles have better roll protection
What Good Safaris Include
- Hotel pickup and drop-off (included, not extra)
- Dune bashing in modern 4x4 with trained driver
- Sandboarding, camel rides, henna
- BBQ dinner with entertainment
- Clear pricing — no surprises
Burj Khalifa Tickets
- Resellers at inflated prices: Official tickets from burjkhalifa.ae or at the door
- "Skip the line" scams: Often just regular tickets sold at premium
- Book in advance: Same-day prices are higher, plan ahead
Dhow Cruises
- Similar to safaris — massive quality range
- Cheap cruises: overcrowded, basic food, short duration
- Book through verified platforms, check reviews
City Tours
- Free tours that aren't free: "Free walking tour" then aggressive tip demands
- Unlicensed guides: May give inaccurate information
- Rushed experiences: Cheap tours pack in too much, spend time on bus not exploring
Water Sports
- Beach vendors may not be licensed or insured
- Jet ski rentals: agree on time AND price before starting
- Book through hotel or verified provider
Holiday Rental Issues
- Fake listings: Beautiful photos, but property doesn't exist or isn't as shown
- Unlicensed rentals: Short-term rentals must be DTCM licensed in Dubai
- Payment outside platform: Never pay directly — use Airbnb/Booking protection
How to Verify
- Check for DTCM permit number on listing
- Book through major platforms (Airbnb, Booking.com)
- Cross-check address on Google Maps Street View
- Reverse image search listing photos
Hotel Issues
- Resort fees: Some hotels add fees not shown at booking. Read fine print.
- Non-refundable confusion: Understand cancellation policy before booking
- "Booking error": If hotel claims no reservation, show confirmation email
What You'll Encounter
- Beach vendors: Selling sunglasses, watches, massages. Overpriced, often unlicensed.
- "Free" photos: Someone offers to take your photo then demands payment
- Massage offers: Unlicensed, avoid entirely
- Souvenir sellers: Items available cheaper in malls or souks
JBR Beach Specifically
- More vendor activity than other beaches
- Politely decline and keep walking
- They're persistent but not aggressive
How to Handle
- Simple "no thank you" and keep walking
- Don't engage in conversation (they take this as interest)
- If pestered, head toward security
- Avoid eye contact if you want to be left alone
Not Actually Scams, Just Annoying
- Perfume shop invitations in malls
- Time-share presentations ("free gift for your time")
- Promotional flyers everywhere
Book With Confidence
Skip the scams entirely — book through verified partners
Frequently Asked Questions
Taxi overcharging tops the list — "broken meter" claims, long routes, no change available. Next is cheap desert safari operators cutting corners on safety and adding hidden fees. Gold/souvenir sellers outside official souks selling fakes. And beach vendors with overpriced items. These aren't violent crimes — just overcharging. Use official taxis or Uber, book through verified platforms, and politely decline unsolicited offers.
100% legitimate. Dubai's Gold Souk is strictly regulated. All gold is real and hallmarked by the government. The "scam" is simply not negotiating — first price is never final. Check the daily gold rate before going, negotiate 20-30% off initial prices, and get a receipt showing weight and purity. Buy from established shops inside the souk, not street vendors outside. The Gold Souk is genuinely one of the best places in the world to buy gold.
Three rules: (1) Book through verified platforms or direct from venues — not hotel desks, street sellers, or random websites. (2) Use Uber/Careem or official RTA taxis only. (3) If someone approaches you with a deal, it's not a good deal. Research prices beforehand, read reviews on TripAdvisor/Google, and never pay cash upfront for tours. Dubai is genuinely safe — "scams" here are overcharging, not theft. A bit of preparation eliminates most issues.